Assurance of environmental, social and governance disclosures in a developing country: perspectives of regulators and quasi-regulators
Date
2021
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Accounting Forum
Abstract
The paper explores the assurance of environmental, social, and
governance (ESG) disclosures in a developing country. Unlike
other papers, this study focuses on regulators and quasi-regulators understanding of ESG assurance, their perception and
preferences for assurance providers, and the considerations in
choosing an assurance provider. Using qualitative research
design, the Strong Structuration Theory was employed to draw
meanings from data gathered through semi-structured interviews.
Findings reveal that external factors such as the emerging nature
of ESG in Ghana, the working fields of interviewees, the
developing nature of the internal audit function, non-Big 4 audit
firms, and the accounting profession were crucial to interviewees’
conceptualization of ESG assurance and their preferences for
various assurance providers. Also, there is low preference for
accountants, internal auditors, and non-Big 4 firms as ESG
assurance providers, particularly for environmental and social
disclosures. Regulators, however, received a high endorsement. It
It was evident that expertise and regulatory oversight were the
main factors interviewees considered in choosing assurance
providers. Accountants, non-Big 4 audit firms, and internal
auditors would need to improve stakeholders’ perception of their
capacity and independence for ESG assurance. Moreover,
considerations such as the value for expertise, independence, and
reputation for regulators affect the choice of an ESG assurance
provider. The findings have implications (outcomes) for regulators
to consider their ESG assurance participation and its consequences.
Description
Research Article
Keywords
Environmental, quasi-regulatory, assurance